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A metal and stone monolith sculpture by artist
Mark Kemp Bayless makes a striking presentation in front of
Physiotherapy Associates in Tempe, Arizona
(Click for Larger)
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The following exerpts, were taken from the article "Perking up Public Places, Tempe blossoms with outdoor art"
which appeared in the Phoenix Home & Garden, January 1998. Text by Ann Patterson.
Photography by Nancy Erdmann.
You cruise past Physiotherapy Associates on East Broadway and spy what look like ancient Indian petroglyphs outlined in metal...
You realize you're looking at public art -- fun and sometimes fanciful objects intended for everybody's enjoyment. But what you may not
know is that taxpayers didn't have to fund it...These pleasurable additions to the city's urban environment are coming to us
courtesy of what some might say is an unlikely source; real estate developmeers turned art patrons.
...The story behind Tempe's privately funded art-blossoning began in 1994, when the city quietly enacted an art-in-private-development ordinance requiring
developers of large-scale office or retail developments to include art at their complexes.
The objective, says Tempe's Cultural Services Manager Jody Ulich, "was to incorpoate artwork into the
private sector. We're trying to to beautify the ciy. We're trying to add an additional design element by involving an artist in the design of
the project. Tempe doesn't just hope developmers will put art into their buildings; we
require it."
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